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Feasibility of Additional Physiotherapy for Patients Aged 75 and Older

Pilot Study of an Exercise Programme to Maintain Knee Extension Muscle Strength for Older Patients During Hospitalisation

Status
Terminated
Phases
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04144634
Acronym
Stand-UP
Enrollment
15
Registered
2019-10-30
Start date
2019-10-29
Completion date
2020-04-01
Last updated
2021-01-14

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Exercise, Hospitalisation, Older Adults

Brief summary

On average, people become physically weaker during even a short stay in hospital. This study is a feasibility/pilot study to see if additional physiotherapy exercises undertaken in hospital is feasible and acceptable to patients. The study will compare two different types of physiotherapy exercise. Both exercise programmes involve twice-daily physiotherapy provided by one of the hospital's physiotherapy assistants, but only one of the two exercise programmes expected to provide benefit. This is on top of the care that people would normally receive, and will last for the first 7 days of their hospital admission (or until they are discharged if this is earlier). Patients will be asked to consent to the study during the first 36 hours of their hospital admission. If patients provide consent, they will undergo a baseline assessment of their functional ability (including testing of their muscle strength) before being randomly assigned to one of the two exercise programmes. The study aims to recruit 15 patients to each group (30 in total). Once randomised patients will be seen twice a day by a physiotherapy assistant who will supervise the exercise programme. On the day that participants are discharged (or day 7 of their admission if earlier) the assessor will repeat measures of the participants functional ability. Following these measures participants will be invited to be interviewed to discuss their experience of taking part in the study. Approximately one month after discharge, a researcher will visit the participant to repeat measures of their functional ability at their home.

Interventions

The intervention group will receive 2 supervised exercise sessions a day. The exercise consists of progressive resistance training based around the movement of standing up/sitting down.

OTHERStretching exercises

The intervention group will receive 2 supervised exercise sessions a day. The exercise consists of gentle stretching of upper limbs and lower limbs.

Sponsors

University of Cambridge
CollaboratorOTHER
University of Dublin, Trinity College
CollaboratorOTHER
The Dunhill Medical Trust
CollaboratorOTHER
Addenbrooke's Charitable Trust
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
75 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients admitted to CUH, who are aged 75 or older, able to give informed consent and expected to be hospitalised more than 24 hours.

Exclusion criteria

* Admitted more than 36 hours prior to recruitment; unable to provide informed consent (e.g. due to dementia, delirium, cognitive impairment); receiving end of life care or oncological treatment for diagnosed cancer; inability to cooperate in muscle strength testing (e.g. unable to sit in chair, or presence of skin integrity problems contraindicating the use of a hand-held dynamometer); transferred to or from the intensive care unit; bed-bound or requiring a hoist to transfer from bed to chair 2 weeks prior to hospitalisation; or if the Consultant in charge of the patient has any other clinical concerns regarding participation in a strengthening exercise programme.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Topic-guided interview of participants at discharge from hospitalAt day 7 of hospitalisation (or at discharge if earlier)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Hand held dynamometry (Knee extension + grip strength)At day 7 of hospitalisation (or at discharge if earlier), follow up 6 weeks after discharge
de Morton Mobility IndexAt day 7 of hospitalisation (or at discharge if earlier), follow up 6 weeks after dischargeScale from 0-100, 100 representing highest functional ability
Barthel Index6 weeks after dischargeScale from 0-100, 100 representing highest functional ability
Falls Efficacy Scale International6 weeks after dischargeScale from 16-64, 16 representing highest perceived self efficacy of avoiding falling
Topic-guided semi-structured interview of the group of physiotherapy assistants who delivered the interventionAt day 7 of hospitalisation (or at discharge if earlier)
Mini-Addenbrookes Cognitive Examination6 weeks after dischargeScale from 0-30, 30 representing highest cognitive ability.
Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) Frailty Instrument6 weeks after dischargeA continuous scale, with a higher number representing a higher degree of frailty
Physical activity in hospital6 weeks after dischargeMeasured with accelerometers
Confidence measured on a visual analogue scale6 weeks after dischargeScale from 0-100, 100 representing highest level of confidence.

Countries

United Kingdom

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026